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First published online February 6, 2004
Journal of Experimental Biology 207, 973-982 (2004)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2004
doi: 10.1242/jeb.00822
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The cost of foraging by a marine predator, the Weddell seal Leptonychotes weddellii: pricing by the stroke

Terrie M. Williams1,*, Lee A. Fuiman2, Markus Horning3 and Randall W. Davis3

1 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Center for Ocean Health, Long Marine Laboratory, 100 Shaffer Road, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95060, USA
2 University of Texas at Austin, Department of Marine Science, Marine Science Institute, 750 Channel View Drive, Port Aransas, Texas 78373, USA
3 Department of Marine Biology, Texas A&M University at Galveston, 5007 Avenue U, Galveston, TX 77553 USA

* Author for correspondence (e-mail: williams{at}biology.ucsc.edu)

Accepted 4 December 2004

Foraging by mammals is a complex suite of behaviors that can entail high energetic costs associated with supporting basal metabolism, locomotion and the digestion of prey. To determine the contribution of these various costs in a free-ranging marine mammal, we measured the post-dive oxygen consumption of adult Weddell seals (N=9) performing foraging and non-foraging dives from an isolated ice hole in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. Dives were classified according to behavior as monitored by an attached video-data logging system (recording activity, time, depth, velocity and stroking). We found that recovery oxygen consumption showed a biphasic relationship with dive duration that corresponded to the onset of plasma lactate accumulation at approximately 23 min. Locomotor costs for diving Weddell seals increased linearly with the number of strokes taken according to the relationship: locomotor cost = –3.78+0.04 x stroke number (r2=0.74, N=90 dives), where locomotor cost is in ml O2 kg–1. Foraging dives in which seals ingested Pleuragramma antarcticum resulted in a 44.7% increase in recovery oxygen consumption compared to non-foraging dives, which we attributed to the digestion and warming of prey. The results show that the energy expended in digestion for a free-ranging marine mammal are additive to locomotor and basal costs. By accounting for each of these costs and monitoring stroking mechanics, it is possible to estimate the aerobic cost of diving in free-ranging seals where cryptic behavior and remote locations prevent direct energetic measurements.

Key words: Weddell seal, Leptonychotes weddellii, dive, oxygen consumption, locomotor cost, plasma lactate, stroke frequency, foraging energetics


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